Pioneering research at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign may bring in devices that range from green consumer electronics to biomedical sensor systems that do their work and then disappear.
John A Rogers' research group at the Department of Materials Science and Engineering Frederick Seitz Materials Research Laboratory is leading the development of such concepts, along with all of the required materials, device designs and fabrication techniques for applications that lie beyond the scope of semiconductor technologies that are available today.
Practical applications might include: bioresorbable devices that reduce infection at a surgical site. Other examples are temporary implantable systems, such as electrical brain monitors to aid rehabilitation from traumatic injuries or electrical simulators to accelerate bone growth.
Additional classes of devices can even be used for programmed drug delivery, Rogers said.
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The devices would provide robust, reliable, high performance operation, but only for a finite period of time dictated, for example, by the healing process - they would not only be biologically compatible, but also biologically punctual, performing when and as the body needs them.
The research will be presented at the AVS International Symposium & Exhibition next month in Baltimore.